In an update to its prior report on a "tactical explosion" inside Jalalabad International Airport in Nangarhar province, the Afghan Taliban stated that two American military advisors were killed and three others were wounded.

The Shabaab al-Mujahideen Movement, al-Qaeda's (AQ) branch, Somalia, claimed killing 30 government officials, intelligence and security agents, and soldiers, and wounding dozens more in a suicide raid at the Nasa-Hablod Hotel in the capital, Mogadishu.

After its ‘Amaq News Agency reported its responsibility for the attack in Barcelona, Spain, the Islamic State (IS) issued a formal communique for the operation there and in Cambrils, claiming the killing and wounding of more than 120 “Crusaders” and Jews.

The Islamic State (IS) claimed credit for the bombing at the Manchester Arena in Britain at the conclusion of an Ariana Grande concert, and reported that the act resulted in the killing and wounding of nearly 100 “Crusaders”.

The pro-Islamic State (IS) Nashir News Agency published an infographic ridiculing the cost of the “Massive Ordnance Air Blast” (MOAB) relative not only to its cost, but to the soda can explosive used by the group’s Sinai Province to take down a Russian airliner in October 2015.

A pro-Islamic State (IS) German-language Telegram channel incited Muslims to attack nonbelievers by using any means necessary so that they can “experience the war they started in the middle of their homes.”

Aden-Abyan Province of the Islamic State (IS) in Yemen claimed killing over 30 Yemeni soldiers in a suicide bombing on a recruitment center in Aden's Khormaskar district, and an explosion that followed.

The Islamic State (IS) claimed killing 10 Egyptian police and wounding 20 others, including the head of a local investigations department, in detonating explosives on them in a booby-trapped residence in Giza.

The Islamic State (IS) published an infographic on operations in the last two months by West Africa Province, the IS division formerly known as Boko Haram, claiming more than 100 attacks and 1,000 killed and injured.

Syrian opposition groups expressed condemnation after the Islamic State’s (IS) November 13, 2015 Paris attacks, and called for international focus on the Syrian regime and IS as the prime sources of international terror.

The Afghan Taliban issued a statement for the fourteenth anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, criticizing the U.S. for using the incident to “intimidate the region and threaten our Islamic homeland with invasion,” and claiming that America has suffered much as a direct result of its military policy abroad.

After acknowledging the death of Mullah Muhammad Omar over two years since his passing from illness, the Afghan Taliban announced the appointment of former deputy, Mullah Akhtar Muhammad Mansour, as the new leader, and a Haqqani Network official as a deputy.

A British Islamic State (IS) fighter and recruiter distributed a message attributed to a UK family of twelve claiming to have successfully immigrated to IS-held territory and exhorting Muslims to join them in the “Caliphate”.

Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) confirmed reports that its leader, Abu Baseer Nasser al-Wuhayshi was killed in a U.S. drone strike, and that the group’s military commander, Qasm al-Rimi (AKA Abu Hureira al-Sana’ani), is his successor.

The Nusra Front, al-Qaeda’s branch in Syria, released a statement on the killing of 20 Druze villagers by its fighters in Qalb Lawzah in Idlib governorate, calling it an “unjustified error,” and informing that the perpetrators will be submitted to a Shariah Court and punished accordingly.

The Islamic State (IS) released the English edition of its al-Bayan news bulletin for June 14, 2015, reporting on its attacks in Afghanistan, Iraq, Sinai and Syria, including the killing of the Afghan Taliban’s official for Nangarhar province.

The Islamic State (IS) released the English edition of its al-Bayan news bulletin for June 13, 2015, giving highlights from the missing June 12th bulletin, and reporting on its attacks in Iraq and Syria.

The Mujahideen Shura Council in Derna claimed liberating the neighborhood of Bab Tobruk from the Islamic State (IS) branch in Libya that took it as a stronghold, and advised fighters not to raid the homes of IS members out of interest for innocents.

Tripoli Province, a division of the Islamic State (IS) in Libya, released a video on a campaign in Sirte it dubbed “The Invasion of Abu Ibrahim al-Misrati,” featuring attacks on Fajr Libya militias, including a suicide bombing by a Sudanese fighter.

The Islamic State (IS) released the English edition of its al-Bayan news bulletin for May 21, 2015, reporting on its attacks in Iraq, Libya, and Syria, and announcing its seizing control over the city of Tadmur (Palmyra).

In its al-Bayan news bulletin for May 5, 2015, and subsequent postings by Islamic State (IS)-linked Twitter accounts, the IS claimed credit for the shooting in Garland, Texas, and identified the perpetrators as “two soldiers from the soldiers of the Caliphate”.

The Islamic State (IS) released the English edition of its al-Bayan news bulletin for April 26, 2015, reporting on its attacks in Iraq, Libya, Sinai and Syria, including suicide bombings by foreign fighters on Iraq’s borders with Jordan and Saudi Arabia in Anbar, and killing a Nusra Front commander in the east of al-Qalamoun.

The Islamic State (IS) released the English edition of its al-Bayan news bulletin for April 19, 2015, reporting on its attacks in Iraq, Libya, Sinai, and Syria, including suicide bombings in Salah al-Din and ar-Raqqah, and shooting down a drone of the “Safawī-crusader coalition” in Kirkuk.

The Islamic State (IS) released the English edition of its al-Bayan news bulletin for April 11, 2015, reporting on its attacks in Iraq, Libya, Sinai, and Syria, and covering the “most important” events from the missing April 10th bulletin, including an operation in Tunisia.

Just one day after announcing the creation of “al-Jazeera Province” as a new territory under its banner in northern Iraq, the Islamic State (IS) established another “province” in the same region, naming it “Dijla” (Tigris).

The “al-Janoub” provincial division of the Islamic State, which is located in southern Iraq, released the second episode in its “Words of Mujahid” series, featuring a fighter describing an area in which the group seized control from Shi’ites.

The Islamic State (IS) released a video showing its beheading of an American citizen, James Wright Foley, and its threatening to execute another, Steven Joel Sotloff, if U.S.-authorized military operations against the group continue.

In an unexpected and unprecedented turn of events, al-Qaeda members and jihadists from all over the world who embrace the ideology of global jihad are now doubting the group's leader, Ayman al-Zawahiri, and calling for his removal.

The al-Nusra Front, an al-Qaeda branch in Syria, reported on a joint operation with other jihadi factions to capture al-Kindi hospital in Aleppo, and said that with its success it took a "big step" towards breaking into the central prison.

Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) released a video speech from its military commander, Qasm al-Rimi (AKA Abu Hureira al-Sana'ani), acknowledging the attack at a military hospital in the Yemeni capital, Sana'a', but said a disobedient fighter is responsible.

Three days after al-Qaeda chief Ayman al-Zawahiri called for attacks on U.S. interests in response to its military engagements in the Muslim world and its drone strikes in Pakistan and Yemen in particular, the U.S. State Department issued a travel alert about the terror group potentially launching operations in the Middle East and North Africa.

Al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri called Muslims everywhere to act against the United States and its allies in order to stop their "crimes," and pledged to free Muslim detainees in Guantanamo and other prisons.

The Turkistan Islamic Party (TIP) released the second episode in its "Lions of War" video series, inciting Turkish Muslims to participate in jihad and showing mortar and rocket attacks by fighters in the Afghan-Pakistan region.

Muhammad al-Zawahiri, the brother of al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri, and fellow prominent Egyptian Salafists Ahmed 'Ashoush and Jalal Abu Fotouh criticized the founding of the Democratic Jihad Party in Egypt and what they see as an attempt to mix the concepts of jihad and democracy.

Al-Qaeda's media arm, as-Sahab, released a video focusing on what fighters suffer while participating in jihad, such as pains and difficulty traveling with heavy weapons, traversing dangerous roads, and receiving wounds in battle.

Al-Fajr Media Center, the exclusive online distributor of al-Qaeda's propaganda, chastised jihadists who spread rumors about the Islamic State of Iraq (ISI) and slandered its leadership, and recommended that jihadist forums and media groups not associate with them.

Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) announced its expanding its online presence with the opening of a new blog, the "Muslim Africa Blog," and social networking accounts on Facebook and Twitter for the new website.

Fighters in the al-Muhajireen Brigade in the Levant called upon Muslims to participate in the Syrian Jihad, and appealing to those who don't wish to fight, explained that merely coming to teach Syrians about their religion is sufficient to fulfill their "duty".

An alleged jihadist group calling itself the "Ahrar al-Beqaa Brigades" issued a statement announcing its establishment, and in it, warned Hezbollah to stop intervening in the Syrian revolution or face attacks.

“Vilayat Dagestan,” one of the branches of the Islamic Emirate of the Caucasus (IEC), issued a statement regarding the April 15, 2013, Boston bombings and the speculation in the American media that one of the suspects, Tamerlan Tsarnaev, is affiliated with the group.

Amidst ongoing media reports of two explosions in the American city of Boston, Massachusetts, near the finish line of the marathon race on April 15, 2013, jihadists expressed their joy and hoped the blasts are acts of jihadi terrorism.

The al-Muhajireen Brigade in the Levant released a video about a fighter slain during a clash with Syrian soldiers in the Jabal al-Turkman mountains in Syria's Latakia governorate, and showing footage of his training and burial.

Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) gave condolences to Yemeni Muslims and al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) in particular for the death of radical Yemeni cleric Awad Ba Nijar, and denied a statement attributed to it about the "true face" of the "Crusader conspiracy" against Muslims.

The Afghan Taliban gave an updated report about its seven-man suicide raid in Farah province, claiming that 80 people from among Afghan security elements, judges and court personnel were killed and 75 others were injured.

Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) officially released on jihadist forums its statement announcing the execution of French hostage Philippe Verdon and threatening to kill its remaining French hostages.

Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) released a video focusing on Ali bin Saeed bin Jamil (AKA Muwahhid al-Maribi), a commander who served in Abyan, al-Baydha' and Marib provinces of Yemen and was killed in a US airstrike.

The al-Muhajireen Brigade (Emigrants Brigade) released a video of a Chinese fighter threatening the Chinese government to stop providing aid to the Bashar al-Assad regime or face attacks on its economy.

Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) advised Islamist youths in North Africa and Tunisia in particular to remain in their countries in order to fight secularism, but told the jihadists among them to travel to fight “Crusader France”.

The Nigeria-based Ansar al-Muslimeen in the Land of Black Africans (Bilad al-Sudan) released the video of the seven foreign employees of the Setraco construction company it kidnapped in Bauchi, Nigeria, and subsequently executed.